REFINING
OF SOYA BEAN OIL
ABSTRACT
This project work studied the
refining of crude soya bean oil extracted from soya bean seed using alkali
/caustic refining method. The work was carried out using phosphoric acid for
the degumming /pretreatment process and sodium hydroxide for the neutralization
/refining of the oil. Certain tests were carried out on both the crude and
refined oil such as saponification value, acidic value, iodine value, specific
gravity and viscosity, the results obtained after the tests include 42.075,
164.28, 589.05, 0.8944 and 0.038 respectively for refined oil and 44.88,
109.52, 448.8, 0.8148 and 0.035 respectively for the crude oil.
CHAPTER
ONE
1.1 INTRODUCTION
Refining of vegetable oils is
essential to ensure removal of germs, phosphatides and free fatty acids (F.F.A)
from the oil, to impact uniform colour by removal of colouring pigments and to
get rid of unpleasant smell from the oil by removal of odiferous matter.
Refining is carried out either on batch operation or as continuous operation. With certain oils even physical refining can be carried out instead of chemical.
Refining is carried out either on batch operation or as continuous operation. With certain oils even physical refining can be carried out instead of chemical.
For processing less than thirty
tones of oil per 24 hours, and when oil has F.F.A content of 1 percent or less
normally batch process is recommended. Batch process involves low capital
investments, simplicity of operation and low maintenance, making refining
economically a viable proposition even at capacity as low as 10 tonnes per 24 hours.
(According to Dietary fats and oils in Human Nutrition. (Rome 1977)).
Soyabean oil is produced from the
seed of the legume called soja max or calyclue max. The seed has an oil content
of about 20%, it is the highest volume vegetable oil produced in the world. The
crude oil is obtained by pressing or solvent extraction method. The main uses
of the oil after refining, bleaching and deodorization and partial
hydrogenation are in the manufacture of Magrine and shortening. The
unhydrogenated oil is also used in blends with other oil but its tending to
revert when exposed to air or higher temperatures limits its use. (Hand book of
industrial chemistry, Reigel et al, (2003)).
Soyabean oil is also used
extensively in the manufacture of drying oil products.
Crude soyabean oil of good quality
has a lighter amber colour which upon alkali refining is reduced to the light
yellow colour of most vegetable seed oils. Soyabean oil produced from green or
immature beans may contain sufficient chlorophyll to have a greenish cast but
this is not usually very evident until after the yellow red pigment of the oil
have been bleached in hydrogenation (G.S Breck and S.C Bhatia, 2008).
The crude oil particularly that
obtained by solvent extraction contains relatively large amount of
non-glyceride materials consisting chiefly of phosphatide. They are removed by
water washing during refining processes. The phosphatides removed by water
washing are converted to soya lecithin. The free fatty acid content of good
crude soyabean oil like that many other vegetable oil is slightly in excess of
0.5 percent. (Hand book of Industrial chemistry,Reigel et al (2003)).
1.3 BACKGROUND OF THE ST UDY
Crude fats and oils are processed by
general scheme shown below with modifications or exceptions for specific
species.
The phospholipids (Lecithins) must
be removed to avoid darkening of the oil during high temperature deodourization
and in deep-fat- frying applications. This removal typically is accomplished
during the alkali refining process or in a separate water/acidic water
degumming step before alkali refining. Crude soyabean oil has an unusually high
(2-3.5 percent) phospholipid content among oils and often is degummed in a
separate operation to not more than a 300 ppm level (as phosphorus) to avoid
precipitation during shipping and storage. Refine soyabean oil contains 10ppm
or less phospholipid. Degumming is achieved by mixing crude soyabean oil with
water to hydrate the phospholipids and enable their removal by centrifuge.
Critrics and other acids sometimes
are added in a step called supper degumming to help remove phospholipids that
are not hydrated by water. Degummed soyabean oil or crude oils of other species
are neutralized with sodium hydroxide solution to from sodium salts of the
fatty acids which are removed as soap stock by a continuous centrifuge. The
soapstock also includes remaining phospholipids, some colour and flavor
compound. (Hand book of industrial chemistry, Reigel et al (2003)).
The soap stock can be dried if
refining is done adjacent to an extraction plant or acidified again to remove
fatty acids and sold to the olechemical industry. The oil is then water washed
and centrifuge one or two times to remove residual soaps.
According to GS Breck and S.C
Bhatia, a total degumming process for removing essentially all the phosphatide
from soyabean oil using first an acid and then an alkali and two centrifuges
has shown higher yields than conventional refining. This process however, does
not remove prooxidant metals efficiently and for this reason has not found
commercial acceptance in the united state.
G.S Breck and S.C Bhatia have stated
that Dijkstra has described a novel process where the washing water is recycled
to the oil feed and use to dilute concentrated alkali. This process does not
generate an aqueous effluent and can be used for both acid and alkali refining,
thus allowing refiners to change gradually from alkali refining to physical
refining. Neutralization of soyabean oil with alkali solution assures
elimination of free fatty acids without notable change in the phosphatide
content.
The phosphatidic concentration
obtained from oil previously neutralized in the miscella was of higher quality
than the phosphatidic concentration obtained from the oil of the starting
miscella. Aqueous ammonia has the advantage of being safe for the environment
because the deacidification agent can be repeated or reused. Oils especially
soyabean oil with low degree of oxidation can be fully deacidified only with
the help of the ammonia. The same effect can frequently be achieved by a
preliminary desliming with 5 percent formic or citric acid. Deodourization at
2100c of oils that have been deacidified with ammonia and washed with water
yield bland and pale edible oils having good storability (G.S Breck and S.C
Bhatia).
List and Erickson state that of all the unit processing operations, refining has the most significant effect on oil quality measured by colour, oxidative stability and storage properties.
List and Erickson state that of all the unit processing operations, refining has the most significant effect on oil quality measured by colour, oxidative stability and storage properties.
If soyabean oil is not properly
refined, subsequent processing operation such as bleaching, hydrogenation and
deodourization will be impared so that finished products will not fail to meet
quality standards. Also, poor refining will reduce the yield of natural oil,
thereby lowering manufacturing profits. (JAOCS, Vol. 60).
According to G.S Breck and S.C
Bhatia, caustic refining removes free fatty acid to 0.01-0.03percent level and
remove virtually all the phosphatides. Crude soyabean oil contains trace amount
(several part per million (ppm)) of prooxidant metals such as iron and copper.
Caustic refining usually removes 90-95 percent of these metals. However, it
should be emphasized that even though caustic refining reduces metallic
contamination to low levels, residual iron and copper still remain strong prooxidants
in refined oils and must be taken in to account during storage and handling. At
a constant percentage of water, the total amount of caustic used influences
colour removal ie the more caustic used, the lower the colour of the refined
oil.
List and Erickson reported that
plots of residual iron versus residual phosphorus content of deodourized oil
showed that iron increases at phosphorus content below about 1ppm, reaches a
constant value of about 2-20ppm phosphorus, then beings to increase. Thus, the
decreased oxidative to stability at phosphorus content above 20ppm can be
explained by the sufficiently high iron content (ie greater than 0.2 ppm) which
exerts a strong prooxidant effect. Similarly, decreased stability at phosphorus
content below 2ppm can also be explained because of the increased iron content.
At the same time, it should also be
pointed out that the traditional method for calculating the amount of refining
lye is based on the free fatty acid content and therefore gives no indication
of conditions leading to optimum phosphorus removal. Phosphatide content
generally exceed that free fatty acids in crude soyabean oil by a factor of
about 6. In refining process control, crude oil is usually educated for
refining cost by the American oil chemist‟s society (AOCS) chromatographic
method. (JAOCS, vol 60).
1.3 STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM
In the market today, most vegetable
oils solidify at a low temperature of less than 250c. This work is to process
and refine edible and quality soyabean oil that will not undergo solidification
at a low temperature.
1.4 OBJECTIVES OF THE STUDY
The objective of refining and
processing fats and oils include:
1. Removal of free fatty acids,
phospholipids (gums) colour and off-flavour/odour compounds and toxic
substances to produce light- coloured and bland products with long shelf lives.
2. Obtaining a mixture of the
triacyl-glycerols with the desired solid content profiles over the range of
product use.
3. Preparation and storage of
semi-solid products with desired textures.
1.5 SCOPE OF THE STUDY
The crude oil extracted from
soyabean needs further treatment to convert it to a bland, stable, nutrition
products that is used to manufacture margarine, shortening, salad and cooking
oil, mayoniaise, food products, Olechemicals.
This study entails the process of producing good quality oil through caustic/alkali refining process which is going to be compared with other good quality products in the market like grand product etc.
This study entails the process of producing good quality oil through caustic/alkali refining process which is going to be compared with other good quality products in the market like grand product etc.
CHAPTER
TWO
2.0 LITERATURE REVIEW
2.1 HISTORICAL BACKGROUND OF
SOYABEANS
For centuries, soyabean has been
used by Chinese, Japanese, korean and south-east Asian, people in various forms
as one of the most important sources of dietary protein and oil.
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